Blood pressure in adolescence. The United States Health Examination survey.

Author:

Cornoni-Huntley J,Harlan W R,Leaverton P E

Abstract

A nationally representative sample of adolescents 12-17 years of age were examined in the U.S. Health Examination Survey and relationships between blood pressure and other variables were explored. During adolescence, blood pressure increases more rapidly in males than in females and only small racial differences are present. Weight has the strongest relationship to both systolic and diastolic pressure. Physiological maturation assessed by skeletal age and adiposity (skinfold thickness) are components of weight and each is also related to blood pressure. Although systolic murmurs are related to blood pressure at the time of examination, the murmurs are transitory and not predictive of future pressures. All factors were equally influential in each race-sex group. No significant relationships were found between geographic or demographic variables and blood pressure. These observations indicate the important relationships of physiological maturation and adiposity to adolescent blood pressure.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Internal Medicine

Reference12 articles.

1. Blood pressure in childhood;Harlan WR;The United States Health Examination Survey. Hypertension,1979

2. National Center for Health Statistics: Plan and operation of a health examination survey of U.S. youths 12-17 years of age. Public Health Service Publication No. 1000 Series 1 No. 8 Washington D.C. U.S. Government Printing Office September 1969

3. Secondary sex characteristics of boys aged 12 to 17 years^The U.;Harlan WR;S. Health Examination Survey. J Pediatr,1979

4. Physiologic determinants of serum urate levels in adolescence;Harlan WR;Pediatrics,1979

5. Blumenthal S Epps RP Heavenrich R Lauer RM Lieberman E Mirkin B Mitchell SC Naito VB O'Hare D McSate Smith W Tarazi R Upson D: Report of the Task Force on Blood Pressure Control in Children. Pediatrics 59 (suppl): 797 1977

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